🤯The affordability crisis is affecting people and families in all kinds of ways?! Join the conversation and check out what this week’s guests on Power in Numbers Sonya Passi, Ai-jen Poo & Rodney Foxworth have to say about this increasingly fucked up economy that favors billionaires and is screwing with the rest of us. We need to remember there is power in numbers to make change!
What do you think is the biggest LIE Americans are being told about the country? Sound off in the comments and tune into episode 2 of Power in Numbers dropping tomorrow @indigenoushouse YouTube and everywhere you get your podcasts.
If you’ve ever felt stretched too thin… or like you’ve lost yourself inside everyone else’s expectations—this conversation is for you.
I’m hosting Kerry Docherty — co-founder of Faherty Brand and author of Selfish — this Thursday in Denver.
After years of putting her family, marriage, and business first, Kerry hits a breaking point—and starts choosing herself.
Selfish is raw, honest, and deeply relatable. It asks:
What if choosing yourself isn’t selfish… but necessary?
Kerry has also helped lead over $1M in giving to Native communities and built meaningful partnerships with artists like Bethany Yellowtail and Steven Paul Judd—she brings that same courage and clarity to this story.
If you’re craving more truth, more clarity, or permission to take up space—come be in the room.
📍 Denver Book Society 1700 Humboldt St
🗓 Thursday | 6PM
Come for the conversation. Leave with the book—and maybe a new way of seeing your own life.
I’ve been relatively quiet for a beat…
and then I just casually launched a whole show?? 😅
Power in Numbers is where we talk about what’s actually happening—
with data, with humor, and with people who have something real to say.
If everything feels a little unhinged right now… this is for you.
Episode 1 is live 💥link in bio. Tune in& let me know what you think! #powerinnumbers #podcast
Repost from @feminist
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The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) crisis and the Epstein files sit in different public narratives, but they reflect related structural failures in how violence against women and girls is addressed.
Across both, there is extensive documentation of harm, alongside missed or delayed investigative action, and clear disparities in media attention and institutional accountability. In each case, the victim-survivors are primarily girls and women from marginalized or less powerful backgrounds—groups the legal system and media have historically treated as less credible and less urgent.
For Indigenous families and advocates, this has been a decades-long fight for recognition and justice. Epstein survivors have also faced prolonged barriers to accountability, but more recently we’ve all been able to witness how sustained investigation of his network by mainstream media has raised public consciousness and pressure for justice, even as full accountability has yet to be realized.
This MMIW Day, we are calling for sustained attention and accountability for Indigenous women and girls who have not returned home.
✍️ Written by @indigenoushouse in collaboration with FEMINIST
We're so excited to share that @crystalechohawk 's new podcast, Power in Numbers will be available on May 5th! Tune in weekly on Tuesdays to figure out "What the &#@$ is happening right now?"
A little photo dump from the last year.
Not everything made it online—but a lot of life happened.
Grateful for the people, fun, laughter, healing, perspective, the moments, and everything in between.
Also yes… my puppy deserved multiple slides 🐶🥰
Repost from @indigenoushouse
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As Artemis II returns to Earth, it’s worth remembering: Indigenous people have been part of this journey all along. Our relationship with the Moon didn’t start with NASA. 🌕✨